
[PRE-ORDER] Joshua Ray Walker - Ain't Dead Yet (Indie Exclusive Floral Arrangement)
Singer/Songwriter Joshua Ray Walkerâs made a name for himself with poignant, human portraits of flawed, fascinating characters. Now, on his latest album, Ainât Dead Yet, Walkerâs telling a more personal story â his own.
âHuman beings are super multi-faceted, and part of the reason I wrote about characters in the first place was because I could explore things about myself that I didn't feel comfortable exploring if I were to admit that it was really about me,â Walker says. âAll my songs are about parts of me, I just didn't try to stick them on another fictional character this time.â
Beneath the albumâs flippant title resides some of Walkerâs heaviest storytelling yet. Three years ago, when he started writing Ainât Dead Yet (his sixth studio album, to be released May 29 via Thirty Tigers/East Dallas Records), Walker hadnât yet received the cancer diagnosis that rearranged and threatened his life (he currently has a clean bill of health). But that year was still uncommonly fraught with mental, physical, and career stresses. Pulling the songs out of the can to finalize them for the album â including re-writing and re-working almost all the songs â Walker, who was then undergoing and recovering from cancer treatment, was surprised by their prescience.
âThat whole year I just felt awful and like I was dying. I didn't feel right, and mentally I was off, like there really was something wrong the whole time,â Walker says. âSo I think the reason some of these songs feel the way they do is because I felt that way, even though I didn't know something was wrong yet.â
âMemory lane is a freeway now,â Walker sings on âChasing Sunsets,â a cinematic Laurel Canyon sound-inspired song all about the unease in lifeâs liminal moments. The idea came to Walker while chasing the last of the daylight across the California desert on a 22-hour drive from his home in Dallas to a co-writing session in Los Angeles (where he finished the song). Though all but one verse were written before cancer, the songâs melancholy belays Walkerâs uncertainty, and revisits a familiar thread in some of Walker's best-known songs: reckoning with lifeâs worth and mortality (âCanyon,â âVoices,â âFlash Paperâ). âChasing sunsets / Where the light starts to bend / The darkness / Is where the end begins,â he sings; after all, when the sun sinks into darkness at dayâs end, itâs always hard to believe it will rise again.
Throughout the album, Walker grapples with big life questions â a reluctance to pass down his flawed genes (âBlue Genesâ); the importance of being content to put one foot in front of the other rather than dream big, sometimes (âStepping Stonesâ); and on the loping Texas dance hall track âSome People,â Walker tries his hand at a John Prine-esque consideration of human nature, cautioning against short-sighted assumptions about other peoplesâ situations.
Ainât Dead Yet is often lyrically somber, but sonically, itâs reminiscent of Walkerâs early albums, relying on pedal steel and fiddle as much as Walkerâs consummate guitar picking, sweet tenor, and high falsetto and yodel. The album was recorded before, during, and after cancer treatment
(including three songs the day before the lung surgery that could have changed his voice forever) and at three Dallas, TX studios: Audio Dallas, Modern Electric, and album producer and long-time collaborator John Pedigoâs home studio.
Coming out the other side of a fight with cancer offered Walker a second chance. But the angst inherent to facing death and the requisite perspective on the past figure thematically across the album, as well. âI live with few regrets / Played my cards far from the vest / Iâve always been my biggest threat / But I ainât dead yet,â Walker sings on the title and opening track. Equal parts defiant and bittersweet, it sets up Ainât Dead Yet as a reflection on his last few years. Fittingly, the album concludes with a softer bookend, âThank You For Listening,â which is a sincere note to Walkerâs listeners.
Though the songs on Ainât Dead Yet are more overtly about Walker than on his past albums, he still plays around with character, at times embodying his most outrageous selves: âEvery hatâs a cowboy hat / If itâs sitting on my head / Just like every girlâs a cowgirl / If sheâs laying in my bed,â he sings on âOutlaw.â The first of those lyrics is a real line Walker delivered once on a tour in response to a fan, who thought he should wear a cowboy hat to sing country music. A rare moment when Walker felt heâd said something exquisitely cool in the moment, he jotted it down and later wrote the whole song. (Walker imagines âOutlawâ delivered by the self-aggrandizing titular character of his song âCowboyâ (released on 2021âs See You Next Time)). Elsewhere on the album for âShoot Me Straight,â Walker brought back the horn section from âSexy After Dark,â to add bravado to a song all about his brashest moments. And in âTexas Sober,â Walker pokes fun at the arbitrary rules for living well heâs watched both himself and friends set.
Song ideas come to Walker from many places, and he honors two of the most personal ones on âCapital Letters.â Written for two important mentors â Walkerâs grandpa (about whom he wrote his first song ever, âFondly,â which was released on his 2019 debut, Wish You Were Here), and Trey Johnson, co-founder of State Fair Records, Walkerâs first label â the song is Walkerâs way of honoring the roles these long-gone loved ones still play in his life. Sometimes he finds himself talking to them, seeking their advice; others he even wonders if they have some hand in the songs he writes.
Ainât Dead Yet is Walkerâs time capsule of the past three years. Standing on the other side, itâs also a dedication to the future. âI'm really grateful to have a second chance, and I'm also grateful to have lived through thinking I was going to die. It gives you perspective in a way you really can't fake until you've actually done it; in a way, it was kind of a gift,â Walker says, though sometimes a new beginning also feels like a lot to live up to.
âI faced death; I almost lost my house; I got engaged; We lost most of our belongings to flood and mold; Iâve had loved ones die; I almost lost my entire music catalog. It's been a lot, good and bad. I'm just a much different person,â he continues. âI'm very intentional with my time, and I'm a lot happier, even though things have been hard, I genuinely do think I'm happier. It's been a pretty wild transformation.â
Tracklist:
- Ain't Dead Yet
- Shoot Me Straight
- Chasing Sunsets
- Outlaw
- Capital Letters
- Texas Sober
- Blue Genes
- Stepping Stones
- Some People
- Thank You For Listening
*** Indie Exclusive ***
UPC: 732388028689
Label: East Dallas Records
Release Date: 5.29.26
Format: Vinyl
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Description
Singer/Songwriter Joshua Ray Walkerâs made a name for himself with poignant, human portraits of flawed, fascinating characters. Now, on his latest album, Ainât Dead Yet, Walkerâs telling a more personal story â his own.
âHuman beings are super multi-faceted, and part of the reason I wrote about characters in the first place was because I could explore things about myself that I didn't feel comfortable exploring if I were to admit that it was really about me,â Walker says. âAll my songs are about parts of me, I just didn't try to stick them on another fictional character this time.â
Beneath the albumâs flippant title resides some of Walkerâs heaviest storytelling yet. Three years ago, when he started writing Ainât Dead Yet (his sixth studio album, to be released May 29 via Thirty Tigers/East Dallas Records), Walker hadnât yet received the cancer diagnosis that rearranged and threatened his life (he currently has a clean bill of health). But that year was still uncommonly fraught with mental, physical, and career stresses. Pulling the songs out of the can to finalize them for the album â including re-writing and re-working almost all the songs â Walker, who was then undergoing and recovering from cancer treatment, was surprised by their prescience.
âThat whole year I just felt awful and like I was dying. I didn't feel right, and mentally I was off, like there really was something wrong the whole time,â Walker says. âSo I think the reason some of these songs feel the way they do is because I felt that way, even though I didn't know something was wrong yet.â
âMemory lane is a freeway now,â Walker sings on âChasing Sunsets,â a cinematic Laurel Canyon sound-inspired song all about the unease in lifeâs liminal moments. The idea came to Walker while chasing the last of the daylight across the California desert on a 22-hour drive from his home in Dallas to a co-writing session in Los Angeles (where he finished the song). Though all but one verse were written before cancer, the songâs melancholy belays Walkerâs uncertainty, and revisits a familiar thread in some of Walker's best-known songs: reckoning with lifeâs worth and mortality (âCanyon,â âVoices,â âFlash Paperâ). âChasing sunsets / Where the light starts to bend / The darkness / Is where the end begins,â he sings; after all, when the sun sinks into darkness at dayâs end, itâs always hard to believe it will rise again.
Throughout the album, Walker grapples with big life questions â a reluctance to pass down his flawed genes (âBlue Genesâ); the importance of being content to put one foot in front of the other rather than dream big, sometimes (âStepping Stonesâ); and on the loping Texas dance hall track âSome People,â Walker tries his hand at a John Prine-esque consideration of human nature, cautioning against short-sighted assumptions about other peoplesâ situations.
Ainât Dead Yet is often lyrically somber, but sonically, itâs reminiscent of Walkerâs early albums, relying on pedal steel and fiddle as much as Walkerâs consummate guitar picking, sweet tenor, and high falsetto and yodel. The album was recorded before, during, and after cancer treatment
(including three songs the day before the lung surgery that could have changed his voice forever) and at three Dallas, TX studios: Audio Dallas, Modern Electric, and album producer and long-time collaborator John Pedigoâs home studio.
Coming out the other side of a fight with cancer offered Walker a second chance. But the angst inherent to facing death and the requisite perspective on the past figure thematically across the album, as well. âI live with few regrets / Played my cards far from the vest / Iâve always been my biggest threat / But I ainât dead yet,â Walker sings on the title and opening track. Equal parts defiant and bittersweet, it sets up Ainât Dead Yet as a reflection on his last few years. Fittingly, the album concludes with a softer bookend, âThank You For Listening,â which is a sincere note to Walkerâs listeners.
Though the songs on Ainât Dead Yet are more overtly about Walker than on his past albums, he still plays around with character, at times embodying his most outrageous selves: âEvery hatâs a cowboy hat / If itâs sitting on my head / Just like every girlâs a cowgirl / If sheâs laying in my bed,â he sings on âOutlaw.â The first of those lyrics is a real line Walker delivered once on a tour in response to a fan, who thought he should wear a cowboy hat to sing country music. A rare moment when Walker felt heâd said something exquisitely cool in the moment, he jotted it down and later wrote the whole song. (Walker imagines âOutlawâ delivered by the self-aggrandizing titular character of his song âCowboyâ (released on 2021âs See You Next Time)). Elsewhere on the album for âShoot Me Straight,â Walker brought back the horn section from âSexy After Dark,â to add bravado to a song all about his brashest moments. And in âTexas Sober,â Walker pokes fun at the arbitrary rules for living well heâs watched both himself and friends set.
Song ideas come to Walker from many places, and he honors two of the most personal ones on âCapital Letters.â Written for two important mentors â Walkerâs grandpa (about whom he wrote his first song ever, âFondly,â which was released on his 2019 debut, Wish You Were Here), and Trey Johnson, co-founder of State Fair Records, Walkerâs first label â the song is Walkerâs way of honoring the roles these long-gone loved ones still play in his life. Sometimes he finds himself talking to them, seeking their advice; others he even wonders if they have some hand in the songs he writes.
Ainât Dead Yet is Walkerâs time capsule of the past three years. Standing on the other side, itâs also a dedication to the future. âI'm really grateful to have a second chance, and I'm also grateful to have lived through thinking I was going to die. It gives you perspective in a way you really can't fake until you've actually done it; in a way, it was kind of a gift,â Walker says, though sometimes a new beginning also feels like a lot to live up to.
âI faced death; I almost lost my house; I got engaged; We lost most of our belongings to flood and mold; Iâve had loved ones die; I almost lost my entire music catalog. It's been a lot, good and bad. I'm just a much different person,â he continues. âI'm very intentional with my time, and I'm a lot happier, even though things have been hard, I genuinely do think I'm happier. It's been a pretty wild transformation.â
Tracklist:
- Ain't Dead Yet
- Shoot Me Straight
- Chasing Sunsets
- Outlaw
- Capital Letters
- Texas Sober
- Blue Genes
- Stepping Stones
- Some People
- Thank You For Listening
*** Indie Exclusive ***
UPC: 732388028689
Label: East Dallas Records
Release Date: 5.29.26
Format: Vinyl











